scholarly journals Learning dispositions and transferable competencies

Author(s):  
Simon Buckingham Shum ◽  
Ruth Deakin Crick
2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Sharon Rolé

This paper discusses part of a practitioner research case-study which I carried out with a class of thirty-seven college students learning chemistry in a blended learning context. The full two-year study involved a multi-method interpretivist approach using observations, unsolicited meetings, VLE tracking system, students’ reflective journal, online informal discussions, questionnaires, focus groups and individual interviews. The study identified four key student online learning dispositions, i.e., the dispositions of resourcefulness, resilience, reciprocity and responsibility. These dispositions were identified as persona-related enablers for online learning and were found to be crucial for the students to develop a deep approach to learning. They were also instrumental for changes in the students as learners. These included changes in epistemological beliefs, study patterns, study habits and above all, changes in learner roles and learning identities. Notable changes occurred in a group of learners who were initially reluctant to learn from the online environment. This study showed that student learning dispositions may be transferred from one context to another. This includes a transfer of learning dispositions from the online environment to the face-to-face traditional classroom setting. Several educators argue that learning dispositions should be included as educational goals in educational curricula and should serve as practical strategies in creating learning environments. Learning activities should provide students with opportunities to develop and cultivate desirable dispositions for learning.


Author(s):  
Mellony Graven

In this paper, I argue that the establishment of after-school mathematics clubs in early grades holds rich potential for supporting the development of increasingly participatory and sensemaking maths learning dispositions. Within the South African Numeracy Chair project, lead by the author, multiple after-school mathematics clubs have been set up for learners in Grades 3–6 across Eastern Cape schools. These clubs are a complementary initiative to teacher development, aimed at improving low levels of numeracy learning across the majority of schools in the province. Two sources of data, learner interviews and teacher questionnaires, from one case study club, are shared in this article to illuminate the potential such clubs hold in developing increasingly participatory mathematics learning dispositions.


2001 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 25-30
Author(s):  
Jane Bone

The concept ‘disposition’ is discussed in relation to its philosophical background. It is found to be a different ‘thread’ from the main theories of cognitive development. From this perspective some questions arise about the appropriate use of a dispositional view of cognition, especially in relation to proposals for dispositions to form the basis of assessment procedures in early childhood (Carr, 1998). An argument is advanced in favour of consistency in cognitive matters and three questions are raised as a result of this inquiry. The title of the paper links the search for the origins of the term ‘disposition’ with the need to have a clear meaning of the concept in order to see where it fits in the context of early childhood and cognition.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document